f- - - . t Custer County Republican i f. . - . . . * . . . ' N p. M. ASISIIKHUT , Kclltorniul I'liblliliBf llOVf , riow trust stousslll naturally be Inferred to ns plowshares. YOUIIR Mr. Rockefeller says wealth has Ha trials , Giro UK the trials. "While the women luivu brcu crowing taller the men who buy i-lotlius for them have been gcttlnj ; shorter. was created < > ut of one of man's ribs , and In a p > " < l many cases ho seems to have lilh backbone too. Dovrle , Chicago's lioulcr , Is probably mistaken about bo Ins KHJali. Hut there Is no doubt Hint DoIP Is In close touch with the profits. - If EHJah Don IP i.in make the eowa flvo milk Uiat will not --our In a tlnm- dcratorm bo Is the man for whom the world has been wnltlii } , ' . Julian Pficzoch and .loxcl'a .lacobow- 0ku , Stanislaus Kott and ICntai/.yna Bnjdnk , and Wladyslaw KoroukowMcl and Josefa Kosclelska have boon mar ried in Chicago. This Is gnwl. It hits a tendency to simplify matteis An Atlanta clergyman has Rot Into tlio acnsatlonnl line by dci larlnj , ' from the pulpit that the women of that city wo worse ffamulcrs than the men. This I ! ooka bad , but If they bet no more on j their hands than the recipes , poetry f oxccrpta and samples of dri > > s goods jjj that make up the usual contents of the f feminine poekctliook , It can't be sueh.a I terrible crime. ' I The tree planted at the Naval TrainIng - * Ing Station In Newport and dedicated ' to the memory of Admiral Philip , who commanded tiie Texas at Santiago , will typify the vitality and growth of the 1 Iwro's fame. Ills record Illustrated at once the valor and the liniuanenchs that characterise the model ofllcer. He did rot fear a lighting enemy , nor fall to I miccor a dying foe. w . Tim preacher Is to a certain extent bound to recognl/.o tJic tnste.s of his licareas. So far as a due sense of his responsibilities and of the mission of tlio pulpit will permit the pix'acher should gratify the wlnhes of his eon- probation. Hut ho Is to lead , not to fol- low. He Is not bound , like the grocer , to 1111 orders for his wares regardlwM of his own WMiso of duty. He Is called hy his church to fill a higher place and discharge a more Important duty than that of caterer to their tastes. Hvery man who pays \vay4-overy person who earns a living Is a tax payer and a heavy one In proportion to his Income , He pays taxes when he twlys rent , when he buys his s'roci'r'es , nls clothing , Ills dry goods or his furni ture. It follows as the night ( he day that If there Is to be reform In munic ipal management It must be accom plished noti alone by those who are taxed on actual holdings , hut by the rastly moro numerous class whoso panics do not appear upon the Asses sor's lists as owners of property In any considerable amounts. Men of education ought to glvo tha benefit of their erudition to the settling f questions which affect the lutereh.s pf all their fellow citizens. Other thing * being efiiiiil the educated man has a broader range of vision than has his uneducated brother. The trouble HPUIIIK to be that the scholars have a love for Qiilct which makes them withdraw themselves from the ' 'HtrcJitious life" and bury themselves In their libraries nmong their books. Their right to do thla Is questioned. They ought not to wrap lu a napkin and lay away the talent given them , but should put It tnto circulation that It might bless oth ers , and , by reflex , prove the sourro of great pleasure to themselves. The practical Germans train boys for their steamship sorvliv by a three pears' course on fust freight ships which earn money for the company while affording a Held of Instruction for the youth. At the end of the first year ttio "boy" becomes an ordinary sea BEdJ man , and at the end of the second year BEdJI nn "A. n. " A year later hu goes on imo of the company's regular steam- Bhipa to get the finishing touch , and to qualify him for that year In the Im perial navy which makes him what all , commanders must be. a naval reserve ! > fflccr. As wx build up great steamship lines we , too , must consider methods of Instruction and discipline with the Muno end In view that every sailor may be ready for naval service If un fortunately the emergency should arli-c. While the ladles of a Western city were out shopping ami looking over one 1 mother's dry goods display the other flay , a man "of subdued and gentle ap pearance" caused BO mo annoyance and Bxcltcm nl bj' handing them red cauls reading , "Who Is taking care of home and babies while you are gadding the streets ? " He told the Judge before whom he was taken that It had been borne In upon him that countless wom en were frittering away their time. The Judge let him go. Doubtless this serious charge i well founded , but It IH a two-edged sword. Some woman might profitably distribute eard.s ojt the paloons and other places reading , "Is tour wife sitting at home with the baby for society while you are out wasting th money ? " When the kidnaping epidemic broke out It wjis found that the laws of tuoct of the States had made no proper broUslon for dealing with Such u crhuo.v The Legislatures took the matter up , and now a kidnaper who piles his tradq almost nnywhdro outside of Ouiahn , does so at a risk calculated to keep any but the most despwnto characters out of the business. Wo need a similar dlsi couragcincnt of the pi-cullurly cruel and atrocious crime of acid-throwing. The growing frequency of this form of do- generac } shows that our present laws ate not rigorous enough to deal with It as it deserves. Unless It causes death or the loss of sight It probably cannot be brought within the definition of any higher crime than assault In the second degree , for which Uio penalty Is 11 vo years' Imprisonment , or $1,000 line , or both. We may start with the funda mental proposition that a person who throws add In another's face with In tent to cause disfigurement or blindness - ness Is not a desirable member of so ciety. If he remains at large ho may disfigure or blind somebody else. There fore It Is for the good of society to de prive him of any further opportunities. Imprisonment for life , or at the very least for twenty years , ought to be the portion of the acid thrower. The crime deserves It and the Interests of the community demand It. "I.lfe Is going to be hard , " said Pres ident I'atton In his baccalaureate ser mon to the graduates of I'rlnccton. It Is well that college graduates should understand how Inexorable Is the law of compensation. You can have almost anything you want in this world by paying the price. And as concerns both fame and wealth the conditions arc hard. Take President Harper , of Chicago University , as an Instance of a man who has won high standing and who Is laying the foundations of one of the greatest universities In the world. This Is a record of Harper's dally life. At i" o'clock he Is aroused by his body servant who shaves him In bed , while ho Is still asleep. This process being over , ho gets up , has his break fast and at 7 o'clock Is In his class room. He teaches until 10 o'clock and then goes to his olllce and looks over the affairs of the university. At noon he goes to lunch and at l'J,10 : o'clock comes back to his olllce where his pri vate correspondence and public busi ness take him until U. At that time he goes to dinner. He will often fall asleep between the courses , but after dinner Is over he goes out to * < ome function , delivers an addrc ri or has to take the cars to go to some distant city where he Is booked for a discourse. He gets to bed anywhere from 11 ! to 1 ! o'clock to bo up the next morning and repeat the process. Nothing siiMa.ns him under tills enormous strain but his faculty of going to sleep any time and anywhere. He has won from Rockefel ler some ? ! l)00,000 ( ) to add to the endow ment of his Institution and Hockcfclier Is about to add oilier millions to it. Rockefeller , the Standard Oil king , Is also an Instance of the strenuous life. Ho tolls llkti 11 galley slave. He has SUltt.OOO.MO In the steel and Iron trust ; millions In railroads and other trusts so that he doesn't know himself , within ? ! > ,000 , < XX > or $10,000,000 , what hiIs worth. Hu Is .besieged from morning to night by people who want money for Charities , for educational Institutions , for business ventures , FO that he has to tight continually and fend off the otit- ulde public and his life Is a omit mini and Incessant warfare , an Intolerable burden , and If he had not grown , up Into It , no single man could sustain It. Life , oven at the top , Is hard. You must pay for what you get. And when you get what yon want life Is haul In the endeavor to keep It. New Cure Tor Soiinl < ; ltui'Hs. | New Jersey claims a man who bus placed upon the market an apparatus which he calls a "metallic and mag netic spring for the prevention of sea- slcknens. " The printed directions thus lucidly set forth the manner In which It may be operated : "As quickly as possible after feeling of seasickness has presented Itself , the spring Is to be firmly grasped at the orals by the hands the right hand taking hold of the cud furnished with a bole near Itn extremi ty , the left grasping the. magnetic end. Hy a scries of vigorous strokes or push es on the spring , which may rest upon a stool , table or against side of state room , and at the same tlim ; counting the number of Ktroke.s or pushes made. In order that the mind may be concen trated upon the work engaged In. The result of the combination of muscular activity and effort , coupled with the action of the brain , will have been found to have entirely banished the horrors of seasickness and all Its ac- ' compatiylug dlnadvantages. The voy- 'ngc will become a pleasant reality , and your scat In the dining-room will never be vacant at meal times. " IMno KorcsiHfii tlio West. Arlxona'has a pine forest reserve covering an area of over eight thousand square miles. The total quantity of pine timber suitable for sawing pur poses within the boundaries of the ter ritory amounts to 10,000,000,000 feet , which Is enough to supply the needs of a thickly populated state for moro than n century. The principal forest area is In Coconlno County , and borders the Grand Canyon of the Colorado , al though ( ilia. Apache ami Yavaplii counties have considerable timber. In New Mexico there are two enormous forest reserves , one on the I 'coos Ulver. in the northern part of the territory , the other on the Gllu. In the southwest ern section , comprising H.701,010 acres. This domain Is an largo as the states of Rhode Island , Delaware and one-half of Connecticut combined. Every woman says of some maker that she ought to charge her only half price because she gave her her start. Canned fruits are scaled proposals for Interior-department supplies. HISTORIC SUPERSTITIONS. Tlic Momctitoii * I'nrt Thc.r Fomctlmen I'luy In II u in u u Affair * . When Sir Charles Napier had con quered Meliemet All lie found It Im possible to force or coax the wily Egyptian Into .signing the treaty which Duly world m.iko hU victory ofTeetdvc. He had nineteen Interviews with Mo- hemet , In which the Kngllshinan by turns argued , flattered and threatened hla antagonist , who listened day after day with the sain * Immovable , smiling eounto'.toce. One Oay Sir Charles. In speaking of England , said casually that It "was joverned by a lucky woman. " A strange Hush passed over the pasha's counte nance , but he made no answer. As soon as Napier had gone Mehemct f > ent for the English consul , who was an Egyptian , and demanded : | "You were In Ix > ndon when the En glish queen was crowned. Werc the onions bad or good ? " j ' "All good. " "You think that good luck Is written on her fore-head ? " I "I did notH think upon ftho matter before - ! fore , but now that you ask me I believe I that It Is. When she asked Allalr to help her In her work her eyes ran over. Alluh loves the Innocent. " ' "No doubt of that , " said Moheinet , inxlously. "She must be lucky. " Early tibe next morning he .sont for Sir Charles and slgne-d the treaty , ac cording to Ixmdon Truth. English power and English cannon he could brave , but not "the luck" written upon the forehead of a good woman whom he hurt never seen. Gen. Gordon's remarkable Influence over Uio Chinese was In a large degree due. It Is stated , to their belief In his extraordinary luck. During the Talp- Ing rebellion he was followed by an army which did not comprehend either hia ability or his religious xcal , but which believed that ho was protected by an Invisible being who led him to victory. No sword could wound him or bullet kill. A certain black ebony cane which he carried was supposed to be the magic talisman which brought him victory , and Gen. Gordon was shrewd enough always to carry this cane when he led them 'Into battle. These superstitions scem absurd to us , but they at least show that the Ig norant men who held thorn believe In an Invisible power , who can give good or 111 fortune at his will.- Are they more foolish than the educated , busy man , who recognized no power In life stronger than his own will and effort ? Squiuv Outwits Kaihvny Men. The train came to a sudden stop , and * a parlor-car porter shouted that a wom an had been killed by the train. Sev eral passengers and the train crew walked back a quarter of a mile and found an Indian woman lying with her head close to the rails. Hy her side , covered with a dirty white knitted shawl , was an Infant. The woman was apparently dead , but the child teemed unhurt. After a hasty examination It was found that the woman was''not dead , but seemed In a stupor. Colonel McKee - Kee and J. A. Rink , of Indianapolis , made up a purse and had the train backed up and the woman put In the baggage car When near Clarion , Mich. , she asked to bo Ijfted off the train , pointing to a shanty. She took the baby and the train started for I'e- toskey. Mr. Rink called to her when he saw her walk away In good spirits. The squaw winked her eye and made a face at hjin. I It \\as a clever ruse to get a ride of half a dozen miles. To carry U out she had bundled up the baby and , lying with her head close to the rails , waited for the Grand Rapids and Indiana train. Her scheme brought her money as well as a ride. * The I'lmntom Ship , While the captain of an English j steamer was standing on the bridge of his vessel as It passed down t he Eng ( lish Channel , a thick fog came on and he began to sound the fog-horn. To his dismay , after he had sounded the signal , he heard the "Hoo-o-o" of the horn repeated directly ahead of him. Ho turned the ship's head sharply to the right to avoid a collision and sounded another warning. The vessel was put back on Its former track and the fog-horn Hounded , with the same result. "I could not make it out. " said the captain , In narrating the story , "andi strange feeling of superstitious awe be gan to creep'over mo. .lust as I was giving myself one last pull together the lookout man called : " 'It's ( he old coo , sir ! ' ' "And so It was-the cow Kept in thu , forecastle for the use of the ship. Undoubtedly - , doubtedly she took the sound of the fog-horn for the cry of a companion In distress , and gave a sympathetic re sponse. Droll. With a savage yell the bravo burled his tomahawk In the head of his cap tive. ' "Ha. ha' " laughed the other red per sons. I "What tragedy ! " taltered we. aghast. i "Ami you make merry ! " j "Tragedy ! " cried these people lu ' patent amazement. "If sticking a hatchet In anybody's head Isn't farce comedy , then wo are a goat , that's all ! Ha. ha ! " For the o were Indians , understand , who had come much lu contact with civilization. Detroit Journal. Angel Cake. Mrs , Newbrlde ( who has been bak ing ) I wonder who llrst Invented angel cake ? Mr. Newbrlde ( who had to sample tha baklng ) l don't know , but I fancy It was one of HIP fallen angels. Philadel phia Record. y . . . /jfr jvCTB IlnincMii'lc Milk Cooler. On every dairy farm , largo or small , there should be some arrangement . The Illustration i made for cooling the milk. tration uhowu a home-made milk cool er which has been In operation on a' large dairy farm for several years. The size can be varied according to circum stances. A shows the little box In which the Ice Is placed. This Is hinged at the end so tlhit the cover can be thrown entirely back and not Interfere In any way with the person who Is putting In the Ice. H shows the height in the box to which the water can go before It reaches the overflow pipe which goes out of the box Into n trough , shown at C , and thence Is car ried to any point desired. This over flow pipe Is a piece of rubber hose. The larger box In which the cans of milk arc set has a cover on cither side OOOT ) MlIiK COOI.KK. of the Ice chest , these covers being raised and thrown back against the Ice chest when open. The cans of milk are placed In this large box In the water. Indianapolis News. By all odds the best method for de stroying grasshoppers after they be come half grown Is the , use of the "hopper dozer , " or kerosene pan , which Is shown herewith. This Is made of stovepipe Iron by turning up the sides and ends about four Inches so as to make n long , flat pan about four Inches In depth. This is then mounted on runners varying in height according to requirements. On the frame back of the pan Is stretched a piece of cloth to prevent the Insects from jumping over the pan. When ready to begin work , the pan Is partially filled with water , and some coal oil is added. If the ground Is level , no crosspleces are ucc essary , but If the pan is to be used on sloping ground it should be made as In dlcated In the Illustration to prevent the oil and water from running to one end. The height of the runners will necessarily vary from two to eight or ten Inches , according to the crop to be protected and the age of the Insects to be captured. The machine may bo of any length desired up to sixteen or eighteen feet. If small. It can l > o drawn by hand , but when larger a horse or two Is desirable. When full , the Insects can be removed , a little A UOI'l'KU DOZI'.ll. more oil added and the machine siart- eil afresh. In this way a number of bushels of hoppers can be captured and destroyed In a single day. The cost or running this machine Is trilling and the remedy very effectual. Nebraska Karmer. I'illlllU' till ! Silo. It used to be thought that rapid fill- fng of the silo was all important. It must be filled so fast that no layer of fodder could wilt before It was covered with another , and thus the fermenta tion beginning at the bottom must gradually work up through the nuiss until It reached the surface , where oxi dization or rotting began , which again worked downward until the decayed matter on the surface prevented any more air from going down. Naturally wo accepted this Idea , as It was sent out by learned chemists and scientific men , but opinions have changed since those days In the light of positive facts. The farmers who have not been able to fill their silos as rapidly as they wished to , or have been obliged to wait for help , for weather or for s'umo later Held to attain maturity , or those who from lack of facilities for rapid handling have been obliged to fill slow ly , have found that their ensilage was In no way Inferior to that which was all put In practically at one time , or without pause excepting for the night's rest. And some have learned that It does not Injure It If n part of the water In It dries out before It Is cut The moisture Is enough unless the fodder has become dry before cutting by rca- KOII of being overripe. sulTerlug from drought , or being frost-bitten. Either of Uiese causes may make fodder so dry that It will bo benefited by n wet- ling before It la pressed Into the silo , New .England . Homestead. TinColnrndo Kettle. If those who desire to kill the beetles and tilugs on their potato and tomato \lne.s would mix their pads green with an equal amount of slaked lime , or one pound of it to two pounds of land plaster , and dust the vines with the ml.Mure when they are a little damp from dew or rain , they would de stroy the insects better than they do by spraying with the parts green In water. The poNon would not wash oft ns eas ily In a shower , and It would be easy to toll when it washed off , without wait ing to lojirn It by seeing the vines half eaten up mid no slugs killed. The lime or plaster would , like the lime In Hor- tleaux mixture , prevent Injury to the foliage , and they are also supposed to have some effect In preventing blight. In the days before the Colorado beetle came around almost every farmer used to put plaster on his pototo and squash \ lues , llrst to keep off the little striped squash or cucumber bug , next to pre vent blight , and not least because It was supposed to attract moisture to the hill. Probably the fact was that It ab sorbed some of the ammonia that was escaping from the " .shovelful of ma nure In the hill , " which most of them used for growing potatoes , and they used lo talk about growing "a peck In' ' a hill" then , but we never saw such a hill. Alfalfa fnr Hnrncx. Concerning the action of alfalfa hay on horses , a fanner says In Breeder's Gazette : F6r more than fifteen years I have had experience in raising horses from birth to sale , from youth to age , on alfalfa pasture and hay , except may be giving them some variety in winter , consisting of corn fodder and straw. ! All animals and man like n variety In diet. I feed no grain except to horses lu harness , and my horses are noted fet ; their size , strength and beauty. I sold two Percheron colts In March , 3 and A years old , weighing 1,700 and 1.800 pounds , that did not know the taste ol grain. I have wintered horses from the city , ns many as twenly-flve at times , oxcluslvoly on alfalfa to the per fect satisfaction of the owners. I have never noticed nor known any Injurious effect from Well-cured , good hay cut ut first bloom. I'eedhiir IIiilf-Grown Chicle * . The usual custom of turning ; young chicks on to the range to shift for them- i selves as soon as they are large enough to leave their mother Is not conducive to the best results. Kor chicks thai are to form the layers In the late full and winter this plan will do very well If they are grain-fed once a day. Chlckj that are to go to market as soon as they are large enough will need a lib eral quantity of cracked corn and wheat placed in a trough where thej can get at It easily'do ; ' this every othei day. The chicks will not over-eat foi they will get enough exercise on tin range to counterbalance any lienvj feeding. The grains named , togetliei with what the chicks will pick up or the range , will constitute nearly a per feet balanced ration. Involution of the Apple. Apples are new In the economy of tin world's use and taste. At the begin nlng of the last century few vnrictiei were known , and we can go back li history to a time when nil apples wen little , sour and pnckery crab apples and nothing else. The crab apple wni and Is lu Its wlldncss nothing but f rosebush. Away back In time the wile rose , with Its pretty blossoms that tun to little red balls , apple flavored , nn ! the thorny crab had the same grand mother. ( rnerni Kurni Note * . Dig out the peach tree borers and Ja > the curcullo. Bone Is the thing to use on peacl trees every time , says one grower. If the sun Is allowed to shine on tin grindstone one side will wear fastei than the other. In orchards badly infested with can kerworm late spraying witli some fern of arsenic , which Is most safely used ii bordeaux mixture , may do good if tin worm Is still feeding. Cultivate the sweet potato ridges uf tor rains to break the crust and kecj the soil mellow. Making the rldgei narrow the last cultivation will causi them to mature early. A great deal depends upon how A\at er Is put on. If you begin your Irriga tlon before it Is very dry , you don't need so much water , but If you let youi grouivl get very dry and then put 01 your water you need a great deal mon' ' of It. ! Often on the farm , harvest or thrash Ing hands find it Impossible to be a homo for dinner , and It Is a vexlnj problem how to haul dinner on thi wagon without Jolting It Into a mush the dinner bucket Is If placed In j grain sack , and each end of the sack u hooked or fastened In some way undo , the hay rigging , so that the sack wll hang loosely , swing back and forth the dinner will Jar very little , thougl carried ou the wugou all the forenoon 'lliiMi Tim London Tit-UitsUoimsel : 1 Insist- on an answer to my question. You- have not/ told mo all the conveisatlon. 1 witil : to know ' / pass ed between you and Mr. Jones on the ocnssion to which you refer. Jlehiclunt Witness I've tojtl you , everything of any ftunscquencel "You have- told me. that yon wild to him : , Jones , this case will net into- court some day.1 Now I want to know what he said in reply. " "Well , he said , 'Brown , there Isn't any-thin hi this business that I'm ashamed of , and It any snoopin' , little- yee-hawm' , i'oiir-by-slx , gimlet-eyed lawyer , with half a pound of brains- and sixteen pounds ofjaw , ever wants to know what I've been talking to you about , you can tell him the wholo- 1 story. " TO CTlllJ A COM ) JN OXH DAY Take I.axntivo HronioQulnino Tablets. All drtipBlstsrolnndthcmonoy Kit fulls to oure. E. W. Urove'a signature is on oncn box. 25o , MnrUn of Snvnutn , Polly Wisdom is generally depicted as a man with a long ( lowing beard. Dolly Ycsi but my idea of wisdom- is a man who has sense enough to wear trimcd whiskers or , none at all De troit Free Press. IIIin Who Gives. "Sympathy , " remarked the man. , who gets sour , "doesn't do the slight est good in the world. " "Then why did you listen to it ? " "Oh , there is no use in being ill- natured. It always seems to please- the person who is extending it. " Washington Star. Tlicso Good N w " 'Are my cudlKh balls as good as- those your mother made David ? " ' Better , my dear , 100 per cent bet ter. We didn't have boneless codfish in those days , and every time we had codfish balls someone got choked. ' . Chicago Jlecord-IIerald. AUK VOITK CI.OTHKS J''A I'.I > ? Use llcil Cross Ball Illuo and make thes > vvlilio again. Large " oz. .pnckugc , 0 cunts. On the trial trip of a new ship runs four times over a certain course twice with and twice against the- tide. Thus her average speed is deter mined. A moving sidewalk , such as was- ; operated at the late exposition , has- I been proposed on five of the principal I streets in Paris , to cover a circuit of i six mlhs. If you wish beautiful , rlenr. white clotheo use Ked Crosa Hall Illue. Lirgu 2 at. package , . & cunts. It is foolif.li to worry today if you can put it olT until tomorrow. You will draw the world as youir deeds draw the picture of Christ. A regular physician has no right txy practice as a horse doctor. This is- the decision of Judge TV. G. Cochran , of Arcola , 111. / * * g\ ( * " * I" K * x Bfet IWk CASTOR For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of HOPEDHt COUE6E. nnpwlnlp. Ohio ; 101 p' r r < > i r ; o. plan to ourn It ; railroad { are free ; ee cutulogutk , disability and ' . . on HO Wldowhoodi I'.I. orany II. H. Herrl.e. LAWN FRITA. . W. Mct'ormlok .1 hon , tlncInnatl.O.I U'nth'u , D.U GENUINE BLACK OR YELLOW WILL KEEPYOU DRY NOTHING ELSE Will ! LOOK FOR A50VE TRADE MARK TAKE NO JUBSTITUTEi CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL tINE OP GARMENTS AND A.J TOWER CO. . BOSTON. MA55. Iteiiulred to Harvest the Grain Crop of The most abundant yield , ou the Continent , lie- ports urn that tlio nver- ncn ) ldd of No , 1 Hard Wheat In Western Can ada is 111 bo over thirty bushels to tlio acre. T lit iirk'cs for farm fr lp Trill ' r g.i i Rjt-HJJ ; * ( , e oxccllunt , Tliaro an g ) > U ' > mlli ! RtnclunK LnniU udjolnc the wheat belt , h'xcur.tlons will bu run from nil points In tin fulled btutu * to tha Krce Grant Lands. Secure homo tit oncn ; and , If you with to purchase nt pri'vnllini ; prluoi , and irouru tha udvautnguof the lovrntea . ' , apply fnr literature , rules , eta. , etc. , to F. ! 'edlej , Kiipi. Immliaaliou , Ottuwu , Canada , o § to W. V. tfjtmett , 801 New York Life IlltlR. . Oraa. | j.i , Neb. , Auunt forthfl Government of Canada. \ \ hun \ Ultlni > lluiralo , do not fall to § eo the Ci cada n Inhibit ut thu 1'an-Aiuerlcuu. a n , wt\y > tHt ALl klit JLS' | a Hc t Couiih Syrup. Tastes Good. . I" tlmn. Pnld br drucclitt. N.N.U , NO,680-33. YORK ,